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- <text id=92TT0349>
- <title>
- Feb. 17, 1992: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 17, 1992 Vanishing Ozone
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST
- The Vulture Watch, Chapter 2
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> And now there is a new question: "What did you do in the
- war, Bill Clinton?" Just when the Arkansas Governor believed he
- had weathered Gennifer Flowers' unsubstantiated allegations of
- a 12-year affair between the two, Clinton was rocked by old
- charges that he dodged the draft during the height of the
- Vietnam War. The facts are convoluted and hotly contested, and
- the credibility of Clinton's accusers is in dispute. One, a
- retired Army colonel, has for over a decade been telling a
- diametrically opposite tale that exonerates Clinton. The other,
- a former official of Clinton's draft board and a Republican,
- recalls conversations with Clinton that the Governor says never
- took place.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Clinton's own recollection today is different
- than it was less than a month ago, and the truly salient point
- is even more troubling. Clinton insists that the death of four
- of his friends in Vietnam caused him to question his own
- avoidance of the conflict he detested. "So I voluntarily
- submitted myself to the draft," says Clinton. That was in the
- fall of 1969, when the draft lottery was about to go into effect--a mechanism that shortly had Clinton drawing No. 311, meaning
- there was virtually no chance that he would be called. Yet if
- Clinton had really felt guilty about not serving, an easy remedy
- was available: he could have enlisted.
- </p>
- <p> The political fallout has been swift and stunning. Two of
- Clinton's competitors, Tom Harkin and Bob Kerrey, who gingerly
- avoided all but the mildest comments on the subject of Clinton's
- troubled marriage and Flowers' charges, have come out swinging.
- Both "wonder" if Clinton is telling the truth, and with the
- Feb. 18 New Hampshire primary only a week away, they are
- pressing the issue forcefully. They are lagging badly in the
- polls, and attacking Clinton offers their only hope for an
- upset. The last candidate debate, on Feb. 16, will probably
- provide the most intense mudslinging in years.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's overarching problem is "how much crap can he
- take," says the Governor's New Hampshire campaign director,
- Mitchell Schwartz. This is especially so in the South, Clinton's
- area of greatest strength, where draft dodging is a major
- no-no. In a long political campaign, Schwartz concedes,
- credibility questions tarnish a candidate geometrically. "It's
- not just Flowers and the draft--one and one equaling two,"
- says Schwartz. It's the potential for a snowball effect that
- causes voters to consider alternative contenders without even
- bothering to come to grips with their doubts about Clinton.
- Death by a thousand cuts.
- </p>
- <p> "If I were at 3% in the polls, none of this stuff would be
- given any currency," Clinton confided last Thursday. "The focus
- is always on the front runner." Clinton is right, of course. If
- Harkin were ahead of the field, his war record would be
- reviled. In the past, Harkin claimed he flew combat missions in
- Vietnam; in fact, he merely ferried fighters to the war zone.
- If Kerrey had the edge, the child-labor-law violations at the
- restaurant chain he founded would lead the campaign coverage.
- "This is the big leagues," says Paul Tsongas, whose own
- big-bucks lobbying for businesses is now getting a working over
- in the press. It's "the nature of the beast."
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton falls in New Hampshire, the vulture watch will
- be in full cry. Advisers to Lloyd Bentsen, Al Gore and Richard
- Gephardt admit they are considering a late entry, but all eyes
- are on Mario Cuomo. The New York Governor has refused to call
- off a New Hampshire write-in campaign. Ads in the state's
- papers and mass mailings to Democrats are explaining how they
- can write in a vote for a "proven leader" in a field of "second
- choices." Cuomo's national supporters are steering funds to the
- New Hampshire effort, so TV spots are just around the corner.
- </p>
- <p> The model for a post-New Hampshire campaign is Robert
- Kennedy's 1968 race. After Eugene McCarthy wounded Lyndon
- Johnson by almost beating the President in New Hampshire,
- Kennedy in effect thanked McCarthy for doing the dirty work and
- announced that it was time for a heavyweight to finish the job.
- In theory, Cuomo (or someone else) would say the same to Tsongas
- if he beats Clinton. The early filing deadlines and the
- front-loaded primary process complicate matters (by late March
- approximately 50% of the delegates to the Democratic Convention
- will have been chosen), but where there's a will, there's a way.
- </p>
- <p> Enter the "mandate scenario," which may be the only option
- open to a late starter. To go this route, a candidate would
- contest several primaries in different regions to prove his
- vote-getting ability. Most frequently mentioned are California
- (with a March 19 filing deadline), and Alabama, Minnesota and
- New Jersey, which have April drop-dead dates. Since securing the
- nomination this late would be mathematically impossible, the
- mandate scenario counts on the trailing candidates to cave in
- to the heavyweight for the good of the party under pressure from
- Democratic leaders, financial big shots and the media. Goofy,
- perhaps, but possible and even probable if Clinton stumbles in
- New Hampshire. The Democrats, you see, think they can win this
- time.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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